Images of Tony GleatonThis documentary showcases Gleaton's award-winning photography of black and American Indian cowboys, the African diaspora in Latin America, and the assimilation of Asians, Africans and Europeans with indigenous Americans. The program explores how Gleaton, while shooting in documentary style, connects with his subjects to achieve a one-of-a-kind image. It features more than 80 of Gleaton's black-and-white portraits. Gleaton, whose photographs focus on the social construction of race, is best known for his collection, Africa's Legacy in Mexico, Central and South America. His work, which captures images of people separated from the dominant cultural group, has been exhibited in galleries throughout the United States and Mexico, including the National Museum of American Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Smithsonian. Photographers Gary Miller and Andrew Liccardo comment on Gleaton's pioneering work in the area of cultural photography. Historian William Tydeman, director of the Texas Tech University Southwest Collection, predicts Gleaton will have a prominent place in the history of documentary photography. According to Tydeman, "Tony will be at the absolute top of those photographers who have had a concentration on ethnicity, on race and the interactions between race, culture and behavior."duration 26:46
STEREO TVG

12:59 am

Shipping Out: The Story of America's Seafaring WomenThis unusual documentary celebrates the modern-day women who work in commercial shipping - on the container ships, bulk cargo carriers and tankers, coastal tugs, barges and ferry boats that traverse America's waterways. It explores the little-known history, mythologies and traditional attitudes which, until recently, limited women's participation in seafaring. The program meets the harbor and bar pilots, tug boat captains, marine engineers, mates, ordinary "seamen" and stewards who continue to reshape the definition of "women's" work. By Maria Brooks.duration 55:24
STEREO TVG

1:55 am

No Job for a Woman: The Women Who Fought to Report WWIIBefore World War II, war reporting was considered No Job For a Woman. But when the United States entered the war, American women reporters did not want to miss covering the biggest story of the century so they fought for and won access. But there was a catch: women reporters would be banned from the frontlines, prevented from covering Front Page stories about generals and battlefield manoeuvres, and assigned "woman's angle" stories about nurses and female military personnel. Several women reporters refused to abide by these journalistic conventions and military restrictions and, instead, brought home a new kind of war story: one that was more intimate yet more revealing. They reached beyond the battlefield and deep into human lives to tell a new story of war.duration 1:03:48
STEREO (Secondary audio: none)

Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly
[#1629]
ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY JUSTIN WELBY - This week in England, Justin Welby is enthroned as the new Archbishop of Canterbury, spiritual leader to nearly 80 million Anglicans around the world. Over the past decade, the Anglican Communion has been deeply divided over theology, gender and sexuality. In an exclusive interview, Welby spoke with Kim Lawton about his intention to make reconciliation a top priority during his tenure as archbishop. ST. FRANCIS AND THE POPE - A visit to the Franciscan Monastery in northeast Washington, DC, gives us a window into the life of St. Francis, who wanted to walk in the very footsteps of Christ in everything he did. Fr. Larry Dunham, OFM, explains that St. Francis, whose name was taken by the newly-elected Pope, could see God not only in every man and woman, but in everything in creation - including the birds, the rocks and the fields. Dunham says Pope Francis's love for the poor reminds us that it was the poor that Jesus lived among and reached out to in particular. DESERT SEDER - According to Rabbi Jamie Korngold, the so-called "Adventure Rabbi, "it was when the ancient Israelites were wandering in the desert that God spoke to Moses and where the Jews got the teachings of the Torah. That is why she took a group into the Utah desert to experience the seder in the wilderness. This seder includes hiking and dancing, but also reading the story of the exodus directly from the Torah scroll, in a desert that one participant described as looking like the Negev, where the people once wandered.duration 26:46
STEREO TVRE (Secondary audio: none)

5:00 am

Powder & The GloryThe story of women's entrepreneurship through the lens of the creation and development of the rival business empires of Elizabeth Arden and Helena Rubinstein. When they first opened their shops 100 years ago, cosmetics were worn primarily by prostitutes and performers, and businesses were run mostly by men. These two indomitable immigrants changed all that and transformed the way we look at ourselves. Starting from nothing in one of the few fields open to them, these creative women pioneered what is today the $150 billion global health and beauty industry. At the same time, they were feisty rivals. Although they lived and worked only blocks apart in New York for over 50 years, by design they never met. Whenever one launched a successful product, the other sought to outdo her rival with a bigger success, and as soon as possible. Their competing companies defined the business of beauty, making cosmetics both newly respectable and, finally, indispensable. Along the way they developed many advertising and marketing techniques that became part of the business landscape, and they themselves became household names and cultural icons. Their influence extended beyond the realm of cleansing creams and face powders to encompass trends in art, architecture and popular culture.duration 1:26:46
STEREO TVG (Secondary audio: none)

MORNING

6:30 am

POV
[#2514H]
Girl ModelThis film strips away the facade of the modeling industry by following two people whose lives intersect because of it. Ashley is a deeply conflicted American model scout, and 13-year-old Nadya, plucked from a remote Siberian village and promised a lucrative career in Japan, is her latest discovery. As the young girl searches for glamour and an escape from poverty, she confronts the harsh realities of a culture that worships youth -- and an industry that makes perpetual childhood a globally traded commodity. "Girl Model" will be accompanied by two StoryCorps animated shorts: "To R.P. Salazar, with Love" and "Sundays at Rocco's."duration 1:26:46
STEREO TVPG

7:57 am

No Job for a Woman: The Women Who Fought to Report WWIIBefore World War II, war reporting was considered No Job For a Woman. But when the United States entered the war, American women reporters did not want to miss covering the biggest story of the century so they fought for and won access. But there was a catch: women reporters would be banned from the frontlines, prevented from covering Front Page stories about generals and battlefield manoeuvres, and assigned "woman's angle" stories about nurses and female military personnel. Several women reporters refused to abide by these journalistic conventions and military restrictions and, instead, brought home a new kind of war story: one that was more intimate yet more revealing. They reached beyond the battlefield and deep into human lives to tell a new story of war.duration 1:03:48
STEREO (Secondary audio: none)

Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly
[#1629]
ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY JUSTIN WELBY - This week in England, Justin Welby is enthroned as the new Archbishop of Canterbury, spiritual leader to nearly 80 million Anglicans around the world. Over the past decade, the Anglican Communion has been deeply divided over theology, gender and sexuality. In an exclusive interview, Welby spoke with Kim Lawton about his intention to make reconciliation a top priority during his tenure as archbishop. ST. FRANCIS AND THE POPE - A visit to the Franciscan Monastery in northeast Washington, DC, gives us a window into the life of St. Francis, who wanted to walk in the very footsteps of Christ in everything he did. Fr. Larry Dunham, OFM, explains that St. Francis, whose name was taken by the newly-elected Pope, could see God not only in every man and woman, but in everything in creation - including the birds, the rocks and the fields. Dunham says Pope Francis's love for the poor reminds us that it was the poor that Jesus lived among and reached out to in particular. DESERT SEDER - According to Rabbi Jamie Korngold, the so-called "Adventure Rabbi, "it was when the ancient Israelites were wandering in the desert that God spoke to Moses and where the Jews got the teachings of the Torah. That is why she took a group into the Utah desert to experience the seder in the wilderness. This seder includes hiking and dancing, but also reading the story of the exodus directly from the Torah scroll, in a desert that one participant described as looking like the Negev, where the people once wandered.duration 26:46
STEREO TVRE (Secondary audio: none)

11:00 am

Powder & The GloryThe story of women's entrepreneurship through the lens of the creation and development of the rival business empires of Elizabeth Arden and Helena Rubinstein. When they first opened their shops 100 years ago, cosmetics were worn primarily by prostitutes and performers, and businesses were run mostly by men. These two indomitable immigrants changed all that and transformed the way we look at ourselves. Starting from nothing in one of the few fields open to them, these creative women pioneered what is today the $150 billion global health and beauty industry. At the same time, they were feisty rivals. Although they lived and worked only blocks apart in New York for over 50 years, by design they never met. Whenever one launched a successful product, the other sought to outdo her rival with a bigger success, and as soon as possible. Their competing companies defined the business of beauty, making cosmetics both newly respectable and, finally, indispensable. Along the way they developed many advertising and marketing techniques that became part of the business landscape, and they themselves became household names and cultural icons. Their influence extended beyond the realm of cleansing creams and face powders to encompass trends in art, architecture and popular culture.duration 1:26:46
STEREO TVG (Secondary audio: none)

AFTERNOON

12:30 pm

POV
[#2514H]
Girl ModelThis film strips away the facade of the modeling industry by following two people whose lives intersect because of it. Ashley is a deeply conflicted American model scout, and 13-year-old Nadya, plucked from a remote Siberian village and promised a lucrative career in Japan, is her latest discovery. As the young girl searches for glamour and an escape from poverty, she confronts the harsh realities of a culture that worships youth -- and an industry that makes perpetual childhood a globally traded commodity. "Girl Model" will be accompanied by two StoryCorps animated shorts: "To R.P. Salazar, with Love" and "Sundays at Rocco's."duration 1:26:46
STEREO TVPG

Nightly Business Report
[#32079Z]
Tonight on Nightly Business Report, there's a new trend in retirement communities - younger people buying homes to capitalize on lower prices. It's college acceptance season, and NBR is kicking off our three-part Hitting the Books series with a look at education. Many Recent graduates are dealing with massive student loan debt and now some of their alma maters are taking them to court to collect.duration 26:46
STEREO TVRE

Nightly Business Report
[#32079Z]
Tonight on Nightly Business Report, there's a new trend in retirement communities - younger people buying homes to capitalize on lower prices. It's college acceptance season, and NBR is kicking off our three-part Hitting the Books series with a look at education. Many Recent graduates are dealing with massive student loan debt and now some of their alma maters are taking them to court to collect.duration 26:46
STEREO TVRE

Charlie Rose
[#19066]
(original broadcast date: 03/25/13) * A discussion about the Supreme Court and same-sex marriage with Andrew Sullivan, author and editor of The Dish Blog, Jeffrey Toobin of CNN and the New Yorker Magazine, and Akhil Reed Amar, Sterling Professor at Yale Law School * Adam Leon on his film "Gimme the Loot."duration 56:47
STEREO TVRE

Roadtrip Nation
[#201]
Meet the teams and watch insightful interviews in Southern California with the CEO & cofounder of Volcom Clothing and a music director who is credited for the American radio premiere of Moby and Garbage.duration 26:44
TVPG

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TV Technical Issues

TV

Next week, Sutro Tower will be switching most stations to their auxiliary antennas. KQED TV will be at half power on the lower
auxiliary antenna, this will affect some of our Over The Air viewers. Maintenance is scheduled on August 21-25 from 9am through
4pm daily. Thank you for your patience!

(DT9-1 thru 9-3, and DT54-1 thru 54-5) KQED experienced a major technical issue with our Virtual ID info in our signals for
DT9 and DT54, beginning apx 4pm Thursday 6/22, which was resolved apx 11am Friday 6/23. As background, almost every TV station
in the Bay Area now transmits on a frequency which is different […]

(DT25.1 through 25.3) Recent storms have taken out dozens of trees on Fremont Peak, which in turn have taken down power lines
leading to the transmission tower located on the peak. It has been running on generators for several days, and regular trips
are scheduled to re-fuel those generators with gas. However, the truck has […]